Hello ,
I'm trying to split a file which contains a single very long line.
My aim is to split this single line each 120 characters.
I tried with the sed command :
`cat ${MYPATH}/${FILE}|sed -e :a -e 's/^.\{1,120\}$/&\n/;ta' >{MYPATH}/${DEST}`
but when I wc -l the destination file it is... (2 Replies)
Hello everyone,
I'm writing a script to add a string to an XML file, right after a specified string that only occurs once in the file. For testing purposes I created a file 'testfile' that looks like this:
1
2
3
4
5
6
6
7
8
9
And this is the script as far as I've managed:
... (2 Replies)
Hello,
if i have file like this:
010000890306932455804 05306977653873 0520080417010520ISMS SMT ZZZZZZZZZZZZZOC30693599000 30971360000 ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ202011302942311 010000890306946317387 05306977313623 0520080417010520ISMS SMT... (6 Replies)
Hello Folks..
I need your help ..
here the example of my problem..i know its easy..i don't all the commands in unix to do this especiallly sed...here my string..
dwc2_dfg_ajja_dfhhj_vw_dec2_dfgh_dwq
desired output is..
dwc2_dfg_ajja_dfhhj
it's a simple task with tail... (5 Replies)
Hi Experts.
I'm stuck with the below AWK code where i'm trying to move the records containing any special characters in the last field to a bad file.
awk -F, '{if ($NF ~ /^|^/) print >"goodfile";else print >"badfile"}' filename
sample data
1,abc,def,1234,A *
2,bed,dec,342,* A ... (6 Replies)
Hello I am new to scripts, codes, bash, terminal, etc.
I apologize this my be very scattered because I frankly don't have any idea where to begin and I have had trouble sleeping lately.
I have several 2GB files I wish to split.
This Code 00 00 01 BA ** ** ** ** ** ** ** ** C3 F8 00 00 01 BB 00... (17 Replies)
I have a requirement to split a huge file to smaller text files based on first four characters which look like
ABCD
1234
DFGH
RREX
:
:
:
:
:
0000
Each of these records are OF EQUAL bytes with a different internal layout based on the above first digit identifier..
Any help to start... (5 Replies)
Hi,
I've data like these:
Gene1,Gene2 snp1
Gene3 snp2
Gene4 snp3
I'd like to split line if comma and then print remaining information for the respective gene.
My code:
awk '{
if($1 ~ /,/){
n = split($0, t, ",") (7 Replies)
I have this fastq file:
@M04961:22:000000000-B5VGJ:1:1101:9280:7106 1:N:0:86
GGGGGGGGGGGGCATGAAAACATACAAACCGTCTTTCCAGAAATTGTTCCAAGTATCGGCAACAGCTTTATCAATACCATGAAAAATATCAACCACACCA
+test-1
GGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGGCCGGGGGFF,EDFFGEDFG,@DGGCGGEGGG7DCGGGF68CGFFFGGGG@CGDGFFDFEFEFF:30CGAFFDFEFF8CAF;;8... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: Xterra
10 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
split
split(3tcl) Tcl Built-In Commands split(3tcl)__________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________NAME
split - Split a string into a proper Tcl list
SYNOPSIS
split string ?splitChars?
_________________________________________________________________DESCRIPTION
Returns a list created by splitting string at each character that is in the splitChars argument. Each element of the result list will con-
sist of the characters from string that lie between instances of the characters in splitChars. Empty list elements will be generated if
string contains adjacent characters in splitChars, or if the first or last character of string is in splitChars. If splitChars is an empty
string then each character of string becomes a separate element of the result list. SplitChars defaults to the standard white-space char-
acters.
EXAMPLES
Divide up a USENET group name into its hierarchical components:
split "comp.lang.tcl.announce" .
-> comp lang tcl announce
See how the split command splits on every character in splitChars, which can result in information loss if you are not careful:
split "alpha beta gamma" "temp"
-> al {ha b} {} {a ga} {} a
Extract the list words from a string that is not a well-formed list:
split "Example with {unbalanced brace character"
-> Example with {unbalanced brace character
Split a string into its constituent characters
split "Hello world" {}
-> H e l l o { } w o r l d
PARSING RECORD-ORIENTED FILES
Parse a Unix /etc/passwd file, which consists of one entry per line, with each line consisting of a colon-separated list of fields:
## Read the file
set fid [open /etc/passwd]
set content [read $fid]
close $fid
## Split into records on newlines
set records [split $content "
"]
## Iterate over the records
foreach rec $records {
## Split into fields on colons
set fields [split $rec ":"]
## Assign fields to variables and print some out...
lassign $fields
userName password uid grp longName homeDir shell
puts "$longName uses [file tail $shell] for a login shell"
}
SEE ALSO join(3tcl), list(3tcl), string(3tcl)KEYWORDS
list, split, string
Tclsplit(3tcl)